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The Southern Virginia Higher Education Center’sInnovation Center A summary of the Innovation Center initiative and its utility to southern Virginia Respectfully submitted by:The Southern Virginia Higher Education Center820 Bruce StreetSouth Boston, VirginiaCounty of Halifax April 10, 2009 Established in 1988, the Southern Virginia Higher Education Center (SVHEC) was created to help the community transition from an historical dependence on tobacco, textile and furniture industries to sustainable 21st century industries and jobs.  It is a progressive community-based institution dedicated to transforming the economy of Southern Virginia by retooling the workforce through education. The SVHEC currently partners with eleven colleges and universities to provide access to 75 degree programs, including literacy, high school dual enrollment; and associate, bachelor, masters, and doctoral level credentials.  The proposed graduate level program will build on the 2+2+2 educational pathway established with the existing Product Design & Development Program.  The 2+2+2 pathway is one of two innovative courses of study developed by the SVHEC to foster a college-going culture among Southside’s historically farm and factory-based workforce.  For generations a formal education was not required to participate and thrive in these jobs.  Consequently “getting an education” was not considered necessary or important. This attitude has been passed down over time culminating in low educational attainment and progress, a critical impediment in today’s Knowledge-based Economy. The SVHEC 2+2+2 pathway establishes a seamless and integrated educational conduit commencing with junior and senior-level high school dual enrollment courses, leading to a 2-year community college applied associate’s degree (AAS), and concluding with a bachelor’s degree (BS).  The new facility will further develop and test out this model by adding a fourth masters-level (MS) degree option.  The scope of the construction project is the adaptive renovation of an existing 46,000 square foot former tobacco warehouse that will be re-purposed to accommodate research targeted at increasing the global competitiveness of Southern Virginia’s existing manufacturing cluster. The research will seek to accelerate the rate at which technological innovations and improvements can be applied to manufacturing by demonstrating how emerging trends in advanced technology can be adopted and mastered. A “Smart Factory” approach will be used to observe and study the reinforcing and balancing mechanisms between new manufacturing IT innovations and business culture in the context of an efficient manufacturing business strategy. The SVHEC R&D Center will accelerate the rate at which technological innovations and improvements can be applied to manufacturing throughout Southern Virginia by demonstrating how emerging trends in industry and advanced technology can be adopted and mastered using a “Smart Factory” approach. The SVHEC R&D Center will lead by example by leveraging the human capital of its regional and international educational partners, its state-of-the-art design and production facility, and its unique cohort of product design and development students who will be exposed to hands-on learning and real-world projects that contribute to regional economic development. Industries around the region will have a resource to help solve product design issues, create new products or components, and lower manufacturing costs through technological efficiencies. The SVHEC R&D Center will make Southern Virginia’s existing manufacturing cluster more competitive by fostering innovation and creativity and by providing an incubator where new technologies can be applied and new products perfected. A recent Brookings-ITIF publication (April 2008) underscores the nexus between leadership in innovation and global competitiveness; “Innovation drives America’s growth and ultimately determines the living standards and those of its metropolitan areas.” The same report, however, indicates that America’s leadership in innovation or R&D is slipping among private firms hard-pressed to singularly fund its cost. The SVHEC R&D Center will leverage its technological and educational resources to generate research economies of scale for manufacturers in Southern Virginia. Smaller companies will be able to engage in research that they otherwise could not afford and larger companies will be positioned to get a greater return on their research outlays. Beyond start-up, SVHEC R&D Center operations will be sustained using a fee and grant-based business model similar to that of the Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing (CCAM), which is fashioned after the Advanced Manufacturing Research Center (AMRC) in Sheffield, United Kingdom. The SVHEC has already been pulled into the R&D arena by unsolicited existing demand:  SVHEC R&D ProjectCompanyPartnersDescriptionFee-based proof of conceptAVID, a developer of novel aerodynamic concepts & aircraft designs in Blacksburg, VASVHECDanville Community CollegeCAD/CAM proof of concept design to improve accuracy of a manufacturing componentGrant-based new product commercializationPrivate sector proprietorSVHECVirginia TechSmall Business AdministrationDesign engineering and advanced manufacturing of the prototype for an FDA approved and production ready wine barrel IDA-funded manufacturing incubator developmentBrunswick County, VA IDASVHECVT Office of Economic DevAssistance in developing a business model for value-added advanced manufacturing processes with Brunswick CountyIn-kind proof of concept (in development)Missler SoftwareSVHECDemonstration of advanced manufacturing proof of concept with potential customers The SVHEC R&D Center will be located in The Innovation Center, a former American Tobacco Warehouse (ATW) whose renovation will be completed no later than December 2010. While full renovation costs are covered through $6M in Tobacco Commission funds awarded to the Halifax Education Foundation (HEF) and with $4+M in historical tax credits, start-up funds to operate the SVHEC R&D Center must be obtained so that the use of the facility can commence. Comprehensive details of these start-up costs are detailed in the budget narrative. The USA-TSI will provide opportunities to revitalize the region, state, and America’s manufacturing sector. According to the Apollo Alliance (2009), a national coalition of labor, business, community, and environmental leaders, manufacturing continues to represent a considerable share of the U.S. economy. Southside Virginia is home to a sizable manufacturing cluster. The USA-TSI will provide local manufacturers with a workforce trained with the technical skill sets required of advanced manufacturing jobs, higher paying jobs that cannot be outsourced overseas. The USA-TSI will improve local, regional, and national competitiveness by introducing manufacturers to technical solutions that reduce costs and increase productivity, while keeping existing supply chains in mind. It will be used to promote new sustainable technologies, assist clients with market diversification by identifying opportunities to expand into new markets using existing or altered capacity, and provide manufacturing equipment, space, and component retooling and redesign.  The Southern Virginia Higher Education Center has developed a bold, proactive approach to the regional need for knowledge-economy workers trained in the fundamental skills of innovation, creativity, collaboration, problem solving, and critical thinking. Once completed, the Innovation Center will house two programs and . The first program, Digital Art & Design, will be unlike anything else in the Commonwealth in its emphasis on the creation and command of new media technologies. The second, Product Design & Development, will feature a Research and Development Center for Advanced Manufacturing Technology and Energy Efficiencies. The development of the Innovation Center will provide three key assets to southern Virginia. It will: Train a large workforce in the fundamental skills needed in the knowledge economy; Create an industry-education partnership that will uniquely prepare business and industry to be leaders in the manufacturing renaissance; Prepare and poise the region to be a global leader in the emerging energy economy. Providing the fundamental skills needed in the knowledge economyIn the perfect marriage of design, technology, advanced manufacturing, and engineering, these programs will engage and prepare students for productive roles in the knowledge-based economy. Developed on sound research, the rigorous curriculums place a premium on real world consultation, collaboration, and application. The Digital Art & Design track will engage the extensive use of hardware and software to train students in the creation and manipulation of computer graphics, animation, video, and sound. In so doing, students will immerse themselves in the design process, and will hone their skills of critical thinking, problem solving, and creativity. The Product Design & Development curriculum will focus on advanced manufacturing and engineering in the study and development (from conceptualization to manufacturing) of products, with an initial concentration on the wood products industry. Courses will teach a number of core concepts including creativity, design, form and function, project management, commercially focused innovation, and research. The curriculum will place a strong emphasis on Computer Aided Drafting (CAD) concepts and software, and Computer Aided Machining (CAM) technologies.   Throughout their years of study, students in the separate disciplines will be presented with a series of design challenges that will force cross-curriculum collaboration. Because the knowledge based economy requires an increasingly large amount of inter-industry and inter-national collaboration, students in both academic tracks will work with each other and with industry partners to solve a “real world” challenge presented to them. Not only will students gain necessary skills in communication and teamwork, but they will also experience the consistent application of classroom knowledge and techniques.  In developing the Digital Art & Design and Product Design & Development programs, the Southern Virginia Higher Education Center leveraged its 20+ years of experience in building partnerships with regional educational institutions to create the “2+2+2 Educational Pathway.” This innovative educational model uses the Southern Virginia Higher Education Center to create a seamless path from the last two years of high school to two years at the community college and on to the final two years at a four-year college or university. Minimally, the first four years of the “2+2+2” model will be completed at the Innovation Center. Current educational partners include Halifax County High School, Danville City Schools, Pittsylvania County Schools, the Southern Virginia Higher Education Center, Danville Community College, and Virginia Tech. In addition, Mecklenburg County Public Schools and Longwood University have expressed an interest in establishing a partnership. Articulation agreements with the community college and four-year college partners will allow students to seamlessly transition from one stage to the next with all earned credits intact. Just as promising, is the built in emphasis on applicable workplace skills so that students may step off the path at any point and possess a marketable, in-demand skill set that will provide immediate entry into the workforce.  Today, 11th and 12th grade students at partner Halifax County High School have started along the educational pathway with initial courses in Digital Art & Design and Product Design & Development (leveraging the recent establishment of the first national WoodLinks, USA site in Halifax County High School). During the 2008-2009 academic year, 46 students have taken courses with that number expected to double in the 2009-2010 academic year. Those continuing along the educational pathway towards post-secondary training will seamlessly transition into the Digital Art & Design or the Product Design & Development Associate’s of Applied Science degree track with Danville Community College. Prepare business and industry to be leaders in the manufacturing renaissance The Research and Development Center for Advanced Manufacturing Technology and Energy Efficiencies, to be housed in the Innovation Center, will foster a strong industry-education partnership that will allow business and industry to lead to the renewal of highly skilled, technologically advanced American manufacturing. For industry to compete globally, businesses must have support from higher education in solving the issues associated with innovation inefficiencies.  Private firms are challenged to act independently to capture all of the economic benefits arising from new technologies, new products or new business models through their own investment in human capital and hard assets.  Regional industry-educational research partnerships established for the promotion of R&D and innovation activities that lead to technology commercialization will yield multiple benefits, including the implementation of best practice processes by existing firms, and the creation of entrepreneurial start-up firms. The current challenge of each firm independently staying at least current, if not ahead of the R&D and innovation curve, will be considerably reduced, and the economic benefits proven to be associated with the implementation of product innovation, process innovation, and organizational innovation will significantly strengthen the competitive position of the partnering firms. In keeping with the strong collaborative environment of the Innovation Center, the Research and Development Center for Advanced Manufacturing Technology and Energy Efficiencies will operate in an “open lab” environment that promotes a merging of imagination and engineering. Such an open culture, predictably, will lead to the establishment of geographic industry clusters that will enable firms to take advantage of common resources (chief among them a highly skilled workforce trained in a complex, in-demand skill set).  Even at this early stage, several firms, including multinational giants Herman Miller and Delmac Machinery Group have expressed strong interest in the Innovation Center’s Research and Development component.  Poise the region to be a global leader in the emerging energy economy In addition to the strong research and development conducted for advanced manufacturing technology, similarly strong R&D in energy efficiencies will be carried out in the Innovation Center. A multitude of events including, greater national and international attention to the global climate crisis, unprecedented spikes in consumer energy costs, and a new presidential administration that places energy innovation as a priority, are coming to a perfect convergence in the creation of an energy driven economy. The Innovation Center is primed to leverage the region’s existing assets and place southern Virginia at the apex of this emerging market niche.  Because energy innovation cannot exist without consistent R&D, the creation of industry clusters with an Innovation Center nucleus (similar to the advanced manufacturing geographic industry clusters) is all but certain.  In a true example of leadership in the energy economy, the Innovation Center will be renovated according to the standards of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED). Once completed, the 43,000 square feet former American Tobacco Warehouse will be a LEED certified 21st century edifice housing the academic programs and research & development that will position southern Virginia as a global leader. SummaryThe Southern Virginia Higher Education Center’s Innovation Center will provide three key assets to the region: the essential training in the fundamental, core skills for the knowledge based economy; the critical research and development needed to prepare business and industry for an advanced manufacturing renaissance; and the research and innovation needed to capitalize on the emerging energy economy. This bold approach will give southern Virginia and its workforce the competitive edge in the knowledge based economy, and will, through research, development, and innovation, serve as a resource for and attractor of new business and industry.
Innovation Center Whitepaper
Innovation Center Whitepaper
Innovation Center Whitepaper
Innovation Center Whitepaper
Innovation Center Whitepaper
Innovation Center Whitepaper
Innovation Center Whitepaper
Innovation Center Whitepaper
Innovation Center Whitepaper

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Innovation Center Whitepaper

  • 1. The Southern Virginia Higher Education Center’sInnovation Center A summary of the Innovation Center initiative and its utility to southern Virginia Respectfully submitted by:The Southern Virginia Higher Education Center820 Bruce StreetSouth Boston, VirginiaCounty of Halifax April 10, 2009 Established in 1988, the Southern Virginia Higher Education Center (SVHEC) was created to help the community transition from an historical dependence on tobacco, textile and furniture industries to sustainable 21st century industries and jobs. It is a progressive community-based institution dedicated to transforming the economy of Southern Virginia by retooling the workforce through education. The SVHEC currently partners with eleven colleges and universities to provide access to 75 degree programs, including literacy, high school dual enrollment; and associate, bachelor, masters, and doctoral level credentials. The proposed graduate level program will build on the 2+2+2 educational pathway established with the existing Product Design & Development Program. The 2+2+2 pathway is one of two innovative courses of study developed by the SVHEC to foster a college-going culture among Southside’s historically farm and factory-based workforce. For generations a formal education was not required to participate and thrive in these jobs. Consequently “getting an education” was not considered necessary or important. This attitude has been passed down over time culminating in low educational attainment and progress, a critical impediment in today’s Knowledge-based Economy. The SVHEC 2+2+2 pathway establishes a seamless and integrated educational conduit commencing with junior and senior-level high school dual enrollment courses, leading to a 2-year community college applied associate’s degree (AAS), and concluding with a bachelor’s degree (BS). The new facility will further develop and test out this model by adding a fourth masters-level (MS) degree option. The scope of the construction project is the adaptive renovation of an existing 46,000 square foot former tobacco warehouse that will be re-purposed to accommodate research targeted at increasing the global competitiveness of Southern Virginia’s existing manufacturing cluster. The research will seek to accelerate the rate at which technological innovations and improvements can be applied to manufacturing by demonstrating how emerging trends in advanced technology can be adopted and mastered. A “Smart Factory” approach will be used to observe and study the reinforcing and balancing mechanisms between new manufacturing IT innovations and business culture in the context of an efficient manufacturing business strategy. The SVHEC R&D Center will accelerate the rate at which technological innovations and improvements can be applied to manufacturing throughout Southern Virginia by demonstrating how emerging trends in industry and advanced technology can be adopted and mastered using a “Smart Factory” approach. The SVHEC R&D Center will lead by example by leveraging the human capital of its regional and international educational partners, its state-of-the-art design and production facility, and its unique cohort of product design and development students who will be exposed to hands-on learning and real-world projects that contribute to regional economic development. Industries around the region will have a resource to help solve product design issues, create new products or components, and lower manufacturing costs through technological efficiencies. The SVHEC R&D Center will make Southern Virginia’s existing manufacturing cluster more competitive by fostering innovation and creativity and by providing an incubator where new technologies can be applied and new products perfected. A recent Brookings-ITIF publication (April 2008) underscores the nexus between leadership in innovation and global competitiveness; “Innovation drives America’s growth and ultimately determines the living standards and those of its metropolitan areas.” The same report, however, indicates that America’s leadership in innovation or R&D is slipping among private firms hard-pressed to singularly fund its cost. The SVHEC R&D Center will leverage its technological and educational resources to generate research economies of scale for manufacturers in Southern Virginia. Smaller companies will be able to engage in research that they otherwise could not afford and larger companies will be positioned to get a greater return on their research outlays. Beyond start-up, SVHEC R&D Center operations will be sustained using a fee and grant-based business model similar to that of the Commonwealth Center for Advanced Manufacturing (CCAM), which is fashioned after the Advanced Manufacturing Research Center (AMRC) in Sheffield, United Kingdom. The SVHEC has already been pulled into the R&D arena by unsolicited existing demand: SVHEC R&D ProjectCompanyPartnersDescriptionFee-based proof of conceptAVID, a developer of novel aerodynamic concepts & aircraft designs in Blacksburg, VASVHECDanville Community CollegeCAD/CAM proof of concept design to improve accuracy of a manufacturing componentGrant-based new product commercializationPrivate sector proprietorSVHECVirginia TechSmall Business AdministrationDesign engineering and advanced manufacturing of the prototype for an FDA approved and production ready wine barrel IDA-funded manufacturing incubator developmentBrunswick County, VA IDASVHECVT Office of Economic DevAssistance in developing a business model for value-added advanced manufacturing processes with Brunswick CountyIn-kind proof of concept (in development)Missler SoftwareSVHECDemonstration of advanced manufacturing proof of concept with potential customers The SVHEC R&D Center will be located in The Innovation Center, a former American Tobacco Warehouse (ATW) whose renovation will be completed no later than December 2010. While full renovation costs are covered through $6M in Tobacco Commission funds awarded to the Halifax Education Foundation (HEF) and with $4+M in historical tax credits, start-up funds to operate the SVHEC R&D Center must be obtained so that the use of the facility can commence. Comprehensive details of these start-up costs are detailed in the budget narrative. The USA-TSI will provide opportunities to revitalize the region, state, and America’s manufacturing sector. According to the Apollo Alliance (2009), a national coalition of labor, business, community, and environmental leaders, manufacturing continues to represent a considerable share of the U.S. economy. Southside Virginia is home to a sizable manufacturing cluster. The USA-TSI will provide local manufacturers with a workforce trained with the technical skill sets required of advanced manufacturing jobs, higher paying jobs that cannot be outsourced overseas. The USA-TSI will improve local, regional, and national competitiveness by introducing manufacturers to technical solutions that reduce costs and increase productivity, while keeping existing supply chains in mind. It will be used to promote new sustainable technologies, assist clients with market diversification by identifying opportunities to expand into new markets using existing or altered capacity, and provide manufacturing equipment, space, and component retooling and redesign. The Southern Virginia Higher Education Center has developed a bold, proactive approach to the regional need for knowledge-economy workers trained in the fundamental skills of innovation, creativity, collaboration, problem solving, and critical thinking. Once completed, the Innovation Center will house two programs and . The first program, Digital Art & Design, will be unlike anything else in the Commonwealth in its emphasis on the creation and command of new media technologies. The second, Product Design & Development, will feature a Research and Development Center for Advanced Manufacturing Technology and Energy Efficiencies. The development of the Innovation Center will provide three key assets to southern Virginia. It will: Train a large workforce in the fundamental skills needed in the knowledge economy; Create an industry-education partnership that will uniquely prepare business and industry to be leaders in the manufacturing renaissance; Prepare and poise the region to be a global leader in the emerging energy economy. Providing the fundamental skills needed in the knowledge economyIn the perfect marriage of design, technology, advanced manufacturing, and engineering, these programs will engage and prepare students for productive roles in the knowledge-based economy. Developed on sound research, the rigorous curriculums place a premium on real world consultation, collaboration, and application. The Digital Art & Design track will engage the extensive use of hardware and software to train students in the creation and manipulation of computer graphics, animation, video, and sound. In so doing, students will immerse themselves in the design process, and will hone their skills of critical thinking, problem solving, and creativity. The Product Design & Development curriculum will focus on advanced manufacturing and engineering in the study and development (from conceptualization to manufacturing) of products, with an initial concentration on the wood products industry. Courses will teach a number of core concepts including creativity, design, form and function, project management, commercially focused innovation, and research. The curriculum will place a strong emphasis on Computer Aided Drafting (CAD) concepts and software, and Computer Aided Machining (CAM) technologies. Throughout their years of study, students in the separate disciplines will be presented with a series of design challenges that will force cross-curriculum collaboration. Because the knowledge based economy requires an increasingly large amount of inter-industry and inter-national collaboration, students in both academic tracks will work with each other and with industry partners to solve a “real world” challenge presented to them. Not only will students gain necessary skills in communication and teamwork, but they will also experience the consistent application of classroom knowledge and techniques. In developing the Digital Art & Design and Product Design & Development programs, the Southern Virginia Higher Education Center leveraged its 20+ years of experience in building partnerships with regional educational institutions to create the “2+2+2 Educational Pathway.” This innovative educational model uses the Southern Virginia Higher Education Center to create a seamless path from the last two years of high school to two years at the community college and on to the final two years at a four-year college or university. Minimally, the first four years of the “2+2+2” model will be completed at the Innovation Center. Current educational partners include Halifax County High School, Danville City Schools, Pittsylvania County Schools, the Southern Virginia Higher Education Center, Danville Community College, and Virginia Tech. In addition, Mecklenburg County Public Schools and Longwood University have expressed an interest in establishing a partnership. Articulation agreements with the community college and four-year college partners will allow students to seamlessly transition from one stage to the next with all earned credits intact. Just as promising, is the built in emphasis on applicable workplace skills so that students may step off the path at any point and possess a marketable, in-demand skill set that will provide immediate entry into the workforce. Today, 11th and 12th grade students at partner Halifax County High School have started along the educational pathway with initial courses in Digital Art & Design and Product Design & Development (leveraging the recent establishment of the first national WoodLinks, USA site in Halifax County High School). During the 2008-2009 academic year, 46 students have taken courses with that number expected to double in the 2009-2010 academic year. Those continuing along the educational pathway towards post-secondary training will seamlessly transition into the Digital Art & Design or the Product Design & Development Associate’s of Applied Science degree track with Danville Community College. Prepare business and industry to be leaders in the manufacturing renaissance The Research and Development Center for Advanced Manufacturing Technology and Energy Efficiencies, to be housed in the Innovation Center, will foster a strong industry-education partnership that will allow business and industry to lead to the renewal of highly skilled, technologically advanced American manufacturing. For industry to compete globally, businesses must have support from higher education in solving the issues associated with innovation inefficiencies. Private firms are challenged to act independently to capture all of the economic benefits arising from new technologies, new products or new business models through their own investment in human capital and hard assets. Regional industry-educational research partnerships established for the promotion of R&D and innovation activities that lead to technology commercialization will yield multiple benefits, including the implementation of best practice processes by existing firms, and the creation of entrepreneurial start-up firms. The current challenge of each firm independently staying at least current, if not ahead of the R&D and innovation curve, will be considerably reduced, and the economic benefits proven to be associated with the implementation of product innovation, process innovation, and organizational innovation will significantly strengthen the competitive position of the partnering firms. In keeping with the strong collaborative environment of the Innovation Center, the Research and Development Center for Advanced Manufacturing Technology and Energy Efficiencies will operate in an “open lab” environment that promotes a merging of imagination and engineering. Such an open culture, predictably, will lead to the establishment of geographic industry clusters that will enable firms to take advantage of common resources (chief among them a highly skilled workforce trained in a complex, in-demand skill set). Even at this early stage, several firms, including multinational giants Herman Miller and Delmac Machinery Group have expressed strong interest in the Innovation Center’s Research and Development component. Poise the region to be a global leader in the emerging energy economy In addition to the strong research and development conducted for advanced manufacturing technology, similarly strong R&D in energy efficiencies will be carried out in the Innovation Center. A multitude of events including, greater national and international attention to the global climate crisis, unprecedented spikes in consumer energy costs, and a new presidential administration that places energy innovation as a priority, are coming to a perfect convergence in the creation of an energy driven economy. The Innovation Center is primed to leverage the region’s existing assets and place southern Virginia at the apex of this emerging market niche. Because energy innovation cannot exist without consistent R&D, the creation of industry clusters with an Innovation Center nucleus (similar to the advanced manufacturing geographic industry clusters) is all but certain. In a true example of leadership in the energy economy, the Innovation Center will be renovated according to the standards of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED). Once completed, the 43,000 square feet former American Tobacco Warehouse will be a LEED certified 21st century edifice housing the academic programs and research & development that will position southern Virginia as a global leader. SummaryThe Southern Virginia Higher Education Center’s Innovation Center will provide three key assets to the region: the essential training in the fundamental, core skills for the knowledge based economy; the critical research and development needed to prepare business and industry for an advanced manufacturing renaissance; and the research and innovation needed to capitalize on the emerging energy economy. This bold approach will give southern Virginia and its workforce the competitive edge in the knowledge based economy, and will, through research, development, and innovation, serve as a resource for and attractor of new business and industry.